By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter
WEDNESDAY, July 27, 2016 (HealthDay News) -- Just one
hour of physical activity a day -- something as simple as a brisk walk
or a bicycle ride -- may undo the increased risk of early death that
comes with sitting eight hours or more on a daily basis, a new study
suggests.
"These results provide further evidence on the benefits
of physical activity, particularly in societies where increasing numbers
of people have to sit for long hours for work or commuting," said lead
researcher Ulf Ekelund. He is a professor in physical activity and
health at the Norwegian School of Sport Sciences in Oslo, Norway.
"Unfortunately, only 25 percent of our sample exercised an hour a day or more," he said.
The study also found that watching TV for three hours or
more a day was linked with an increased risk of early death, regardless
of physical activity -- except among those who were the most physically
active.
However, even among those who exercised the most, the
risk of premature death was significantly increased if they watched five
hours of TV a day or more, the researchers added.
It's not TV, per se, that is associated with an increased
risk of dying early; rather, TV is a marker for sitting and not being
active, Ekelund said.
In their review of 16 previously published studies that
included more than one million people, the researchers divided the
participants into four groups: those who got about 5 minutes of
moderate-intensity exercise a day; 25 to 35 minutes a day; 50 to 65
minutes day; and 60 to 75 minutes a day.
The increased risk of early death ranged from 12 percent
to 59 percent, depending on how much exercise the participants got, the
findings showed.
"Indeed, those belonging to the most active group, and
who are active about 60 to 75 minutes per day, seem to have no increased
risk of mortality, even if they sit for more than eight hours a day,"
Ekelund said.
"Sit less, move more, and the more you move the better," he suggested.
The report, which did not prove that inactivity caused early death, was published online July 27 in The Lancet.
According to Dr. David Katz, president of the American
College of Lifestyle Medicine, "This important analysis fortifies the
increasingly clear verdict from a large and growing body of evidence
addressing physical activity and health: all movement is good movement."
Evidence is clear that moderately vigorous exercise has an array of health benefits, Katz said.
"If you don't exercise but can stand often, do. If you
can't stand often but can exercise, do," he added. "Better still, do
both. It's clear: all movement is good movement."
Not only does physical inactivity increase the risk of
early death, it's expensive, according to another study published in the
same journal issue.
In that study, researchers estimated the cost of being
physically inactive based on the increased risk for type 2 diabetes,
heart disease, stroke, and breast and colon cancer. In 2013 dollars, the
study authors estimated that inactivity costs the United States about
$28 billion annually.
"The current economic cost of physical inactivity is
borne mainly by high-income countries. However, as low- and
middle-income countries develop, and if the current trajectory of
inactivity continues, so too will the economic burden in low- and
middle-income countries who are currently poorly equipped to deal with
chronic diseases linked to physical inactivity," study author Dr. Melody
Ding, of the University of Sydney in Australia, said in a statement. US News
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